Contrary to assumptions, low-wage workers lose substantial income in years after layoff
Major cities reliably feed residents to the same smaller markets, and housing booms predictably travel with them
Pushing aside GDP for a measure of human well-being turns out to be very, very difficult. Ask Dan Benjamin
Cassie Holmes’ book combines social science and personal history; jilted on the way to the altar
Households with kids ages 6 to 12 feel the interruption most
The history of industrial transformation suggests more gradual change
The empirical study of happiness, a growth area at business schools, enters the classroom
People across studies want to change their lives, but are more inclined to do that in the distant future
Researchers told subjects to treat their weekend like a vacation, then gauged happiness on Monday
Industrial laundry gains 4% output; better health and better feelings toward employer could account for increase
Malignant personalities loom large in workplace happiness and a supervisor’s positive tone carries only so far